Rise of Shadows: Dalaran in Hearthstone's Alternative Universe

In the last couple of years, Hearthstone went from a funny Warcraft franchise spin-off to becoming a true alternative universe of World of Warcraft.

Hearthstone’s upcoming expansion Rise of Shadows looks to be the pinnacle of Warcraft fan service in card game form, including hommages to old friends, portrayal of current storylines and foreshadowing in regards to upcoming WoW content.

Rafaam and the League of E.V.I.L.

The general storyline of Rise of Shadows looks as followed: Arch-Thief Rafaam, Supreme Archeologist and main villain, looks to pull off the heist of a lifetime. Together with the League of E.V.I.L, which includes four antagonists of older Hearthstone expansions, he wants to steal Dalaran’s most precious artifacts and relics.

Hagatha from the Witchwood, Dr. Boom from Boomsday Project, Madame Lazul from Whispers of the Old Gods and King Togwaggle from Kobolds and Catacombs all unite and follow Rafaam’s call to rob the Kirin Tor and the citizens of the mage capital.

Therefore, all nine Hearthstone classes will be divided into good and evil. While Shamans, Warriors, Priests, Rogues and Warlocks will support Rafaam’s evil plans, Mages, Hunters, Paladins and Druids are bound to protect the city of Dalaran. Despite the very polarizing split between classes that almost looks like the division between factions, It should still be noted that the new game board shows signs of a time before Legion and Battle for Azeroth. The dusk lillies planted all over the board for example imply that the Nightborne still have influence within Dalaran, which they would have lost after joining the Horde after Legion.

The Defenders of Dalaran

This distribution of classes allows to introduce several classic figures of Azerothian history that have either done good or evil - or both!

The Mage class, for example, will feature two incredibly important characters of Warcraft lore: Kalecgos and Khadgar. And that makes total sense! The city of Dalaran is full of mages, Kirin Tor or not, and the Mage class in Hearthstone should reflect the fact that mostly magic will be used to defend the city limits.

As the past has shown, both members of the current Council of Six have huge interest in the well-being of Dalaran and its citizens. However, Khadgar in particular bailed on the players at the end of Legion, as he preferred to continue his studies in Karazhan instead of getting involved with the conflict that is now the Battle for Azeroth.

Most the expansion's storyline will unfold when the single-player campaign launches a few weeks after launch, and it will be very interesting to see how these two powerful mage characters, who very recently didn’t have that much influence on Warcraft history, will play out.

Vereesa and Rhyssa - Alliance Blood Elves and Gnome Paladins?

Two other defending classes that received quite the heavy lore hitters are Hunter and Paladin. First, there is Vereesa Windrunner, one of two Hunter legendary cards.

Compared to Alleria and Sylvanas, the youngest of three Windrunner sisters went through quite an evolution herself. Just recently, a comic called Three Sisters shed light on the current whereabouts of Vereesa and her sisters.

Unlike Alleria and Sylvanas, Vereesa is still a high elf. Typical for her kin, she never really connected with a lot of other factions. The blood elves in particular have always been a thorn in the side of the Windrunner family. That is why Vereesa founded the Silver Covenant during the Wrath of the Lich King to protect the Alliance from the blood elves who decided to join the Horde.

In Three Sisters, the trio infernale reunites again for the first time in ages. While travelling to their home in Quel’Thalas, Windrunner Spire, Vereesa admits to her siblings that she changed her mind about the blood elves, and that she hopes to see them rejoin the Alliance soon.

Back to Hearthstone’s Vereesa Windrunner. Her card text implies the use of a bow, and that is not your everyday kind of bow, it is indeed Thori’dal, the Stars’ Fury. And that is where Hearthstone’s and Warcraft’s universes align: There is common speculation that this legendary bow once was wielded by none less than blood elf leader Halduron Brightwing, Ranger-General of Silvermoon.

Could Thori’dal be a present by Halduron to prove his friendship to Vereesa? Should it be interpreted as some sort of peace-offering between Quel’dorei and Sin’dorei? And why are there multiple Sunreaver blood elf cards but none for the Silver Covenant despite the fact that the Sunreavers got kicked out by Jaina Proudmoore during the Purge of Dalaran?

As shown through this particular card, Hearthstone knows how to walk the thin line between randomly rewriting characters stories and printing arbitrary depictions of important parts of Warcraft history.

The same goes for Commander Rhyssa, a new Paladin legendary card. The card art shows a gnome on a mechano-strider, defending Dalaran in the background. But after taking a closer look at Rhyssa’s attire and gesture, it seems that she is indeed a Gnome Paladin!

In current World of Warcraft, gnomes can’t be paladins. The reasons behind that decision are unclear, because there is plenty of evidence that gnomes do worship the light, and they can choose to become priests as well.

Back when Hearthstone’s last expansion Rastakhan’s Rumble got released, players immediately identified the art of a card named Immortal Prelate as a Zandalari Paladin. Shortly after, the Zandalari Allied Race got introduced, and with it the ability for them to choose the Paladin class.

Does Commander Rhyssa foreshadow the future of Gnome Paladins in World of Warcraft? Maybe. Will we see a whole lot of gnome-focussed content in the near future of Blizzard’s MMO? Most definitely. The introduction of Mechagon in patch 8.2, a mega-dungeon just like Karazhan, points at the development of the gnome race and storyline. To allow gnomes to become warriors of the Holy Light might sound like a big stretch at the moment; however, we have seen Hearthstone’s alternative universe make a huge impact on WoW storytelling in the recent past.

Alternative Universe, But Still Different

Despite all the enormous character inclusions, Hearthstone’s Rise of Shadows doesn’t forget where it came from: First and foremost it takes an alternative and light-hearted approach to the past and current landscape of Warcraft.

The Shaman legendary Scargil, for example, could trigger serious flashbacks for both Alliance and Horde players, as him and his murlocs may served as the first contact with the iconic tribe.

The neutral card Azerite Elemental clearly hints at the current BfA storyline based around the precious resource, and it could very well become a staple in spell-damage-based decks.

Another neutral card called Soldier of Fortune shows an elemental made out of coins, very similar to Opulence, a boss in Battle for Azeroth’s current raid Battle for Dazar’Alor.

The Warcraft Journey Continues

Like many expansions before, Rise of Shadows serves as proof that both Hearthstone and World of Warcraft nowadays go similar ways in terms of general storytelling. The practice of cross-franchising is no longer limited to the use of a single storyline; it’s actually quite the opposite, as Hearthstone and its search for identity both as an online card game and a part of the Blizzard franchise demonstrates.

Over Time, Team 5 learned to find their way of paying tribute to their storytelling ancestors while gaining more and more influence on the World of Warcraft by putting things in perspective within their alternative Warcraft universe.

Commento di CornbreadPops

Commento di Aesiria

Commento di Aesiria

It almost seems as if the Alliance and Horde as factions will come to an end, and that all players in WoW will play as one against a common enemy from the next expansion forward.

As someone that likes the Alliance vs Horde idea, it's just not working well in WoW for several reasons, so at this point I would be fine with seeing that idea go even though I've been against it until now.

Commento di Asheeva

on 2019-04-07T22:19:42-05:00

Removed

Commento di 1811332

on 2019-04-07T22:33:58-05:00

This post was from a user who has deleted their account.

Commento di hotaru251

on 2019-04-07T23:50:08-05:00

nomi

got tired of burning food so now he will burn your cards...

Commento di Luck4

on 2019-04-08T00:01:45-05:00

Only Sunreavers Cards... No sign of Silver Covenant... WoW Head calling High Elves as Alliance Blood Elves...

The amount of Horde bias is disgusting!

Commento di Arakara

on 2019-04-08T01:12:59-05:00

No.... gnomes cannot become paladins before Night elves!

They can, but they'd be battery-powered Paladins. XD

Commento di Tusknoir

on 2019-04-08T06:12:36-05:00

Why would nightborne lose any influense in dalaran after joining the horde? Dalaran isn't lead by Jaina anymore, in fact this has to be post-legion, because all the nightborne were in suramar, isolated in a bubble before legion happened.

Commento di Ahndrumon

on 2019-04-08T06:22:51-05:00

So the Sunreavers and Nightborne take over Dalaran.New Warfront confirmed! ;)

Commento di angeleyed

on 2019-04-08T07:21:29-05:00

Why are people still using the term high elves? Should we call the French people Franks or the Scots Picts? It is blood elves now whether you like it or not.

Commento di Moonsign

Commento di KuripuGao

on 2019-04-08T08:04:37-05:00

Why are people still using the term high elves? Should we call the French people Franks or the Scots Picts? It is blood elves now whether you like it or not.

Because - and I may be mistaken, I'm not Nobbel87 - the high elves are a different race. The Blood Elves were corrupted and addicted to the sunwell's magic, whereas the high elves weren't or they had their own well (that wasn't blown up). Calling high elves by name is less a "calling french franks" situation, and more of a "calling Celts Celts" situation. It'd be wrong to say English people are Americans, so why would we call high elves blood elves?

Commento di Val01

on 2019-04-08T08:15:51-05:00

Why are people still using the term high elves? Should we call the French people Franks or the Scots Picts? It is blood elves now whether you like it or not.

You should actually try playing the game if you're going to spend time on a website about it. Trust me things will start making so much more sense for you, it's pretty wild actually!

Commento di jenrai

on 2019-04-08T09:16:50-05:00

A+ art on the Nomi card. The uncontrolled inferno behind him really sets it off.

Commento di perculia

on 2019-04-08T09:17:50-05:00

Why would nightborne lose any influense in dalaran after joining the horde? Dalaran isn't lead by Jaina anymore, in fact this has to be post-legion, because all the nightborne were in suramar, isolated in a bubble before legion happened.

I'm not the author of the piece, but I believe he means that in this AU, they work more closely with the Kirin Tor and they'd be a neutral faction first over a Horde one.

Commento di Alexptm29

on 2019-04-08T09:42:56-05:00

Why are people still using the term high elves? Should we call the French people Franks or the Scots Picts? It is blood elves now whether you like it or not.

Why would you call them trolls then? They should be Zandalar Night Elves. The evolution of a race due to magic doesn't extinguish the previous race because not every single high elf turned into a blood elf.